[The
Chinese state news media reported on Tuesday that a former computer technician,
Huang Yu, 41, who worked at a cryptographic institute in Chengdu , had been sentenced to death for selling 150,000
classified documents to foreign spies from 2002 to 2011. His Chinese wife and
brother-in-law were imprisoned for negligent disclosure of state secrets, the
reports said.]
By Didi Kirsten Tatlow
What
Ms. Li, a state employee, does not know is that her foreign Romeo has an
ulterior motive: espionage. But the devastating truth is revealed toward the
end of a 16-panel cartoon that the Beijing authorities posted in subway stations, streets
and residential compounds for China ’s first National Security Education Day last
Friday. Caught by security officers after handing her boyfriend a disc of work
secrets at his request, Ms. Li sits before two stern officers, handcuffed and
sobbing: “I didn’t know he was a spy. I was used by him!”
It
was unclear why the authorities chose to cast foreign men as possible spies and
young Chinese women as their targets in this first public education drive.
A
person answering the telephone at the propaganda office of the Beijing municipal party committee requested
questions by fax. A fax including a question about the poster went unanswered.
Despite
the emphatic warnings of the tale, titled “Dangerous Love,” a morning on the
streets of Beijing suggests it may not be having quite the
impact the government hopes.
“How
could ordinary people know anything about state secrets?” asked Mr. Liu, a
resident of Wudaoying
Lane
in central Beijing , where one of the posters hangs on the wall
of a construction site.
If
even young girls know secrets, what kind of secrets are they?” asked Mr. Liu, who
gave only his surname and put his age at “about 50,” after answering a knock at
his door late on a warm morning.
“What?!”
asked a woman strolling along the lane who identified herself only as Ms. Yang.
(No one who was asked about the potentially delicate topic of national security
would disclose a full name.) She looked unfazed when questioned about National
Security Education Day.
“I
run a restaurant called Chi Mian,” Mandarin for “eat noodles,” “just down the
lane, and we get lots of foreigners,” she said. “English, French, Japanese. They’re
very nice and never cause trouble, even after they’ve been drinking.”
Teriza,
25, a Czech tourist who was with her parents, said the idea of a public
campaign warning against foreign spies in peacetime was not a big deal to her
family, since their own country had a Communist past.
“We
had this 20 years ago, so it’s very normal,” she said. “But I don’t think my
brother,” who is studying in Beijing , “is at all aware of this, and he is in
those student circles.”
A
young couple who gave their names as Ms. Cheng and Mr. Zhang had not noticed
the poster until reporters pointed it out.
After
glancing it over, Mr. Zhang said, “The cartoon is quite realistic, because you
do see foreign men hitting on Chinese women, more often than foreign women
hitting on Chinese men.”
“And
actually,” he said, “I think a lot of young women are pretty stupid.”
His
girlfriend, who did not appear offended by that comment, said: “I studied in Sydney . I never dated a foreigner in Australia because I’m pretty conventional.”
“I
never saw a poster like that in Australia ,” she added.
In
the Dongdan subway station, the poster adorns two orange pillars on the busy
platform for the No. 5 line. Over 15 minutes, none of the people rushing by or
waiting for a train read the sign, except for a woman who identified herself as
Ms. Chen. She said she had stopped in front of one because reporters were
photographing it.
Ms.
Chen, 26, a saleswoman, said she thought the warning was a good idea.
“It’s
necessary for the government to have these kinds of warnings, because some
Chinese women are naïve,” she said. “I don’t come into contact with foreigners
at work, but if there was a foreigner making advances I would definitely ask
what kind of job he did before dating him. I’d be alert.”
One
possible explanation for the low-key public reaction could be the profusion of
such morally themed messages on billboards and walls across Beijing , above and below ground.
Three
in or near the Dongdan station read: “Harmony in 10,000 Families.” “You, Me and
Them, Be Civilized.” “Enhance the Spirit of Lei Feng,” a reference to the
Communist hero of selflessness. Elsewhere, “Rejuvenate the Nation,” “Be a
Volunteer” and “Serve the People” are common.
Riding
the subway is itself an exercise in security, requiring airport-style checks of
bags and bodies of passengers, even drinking from water bottles to prove the
contents are potable.
National
Security Education Day, on April 15, was established after China passed a National Security Law in July
outlining greater security efforts in 11 areas, including political, territorial,
military, cultural and technological.
The
Chinese state news media reported on Tuesday that a former computer technician,
Huang Yu, 41, who worked at a cryptographic institute in Chengdu , had been sentenced to death for selling 150,000
classified documents to foreign spies from 2002 to 2011. His Chinese wife and
brother-in-law were imprisoned for negligent disclosure of state secrets, the
reports said.
Follow
Didi Kirsten Tatlow on Twitter @dktatlow.
Vanessa Piao contributed research.